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Neutral Citation Number: [2012] EWHC 3702 (Comm) IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN S BENCH DIVISION COMMERCIAL COURT Case No: 2012-1047 Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Date: 20/12/2012 Before: MR JUSTICE ANDREW SMITH - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Between: ARSANOVIA LIMITED BURLEY HOLDINGS LIMITED UNITECH LIMITED and CRUZ CITY 1 MAURITIUS HOLDINGS Claimants Defendant IN THE MATTER OF ARBITRATIONS BETWEEN: LCIA CASE NO. 111791 CRUZ CITY 1 MAURITIUS HOLDINGS and ARSANOVIA LIMITED BURLEY HOLDINGS LIMITED LCIA CASE NO. 111792 CRUZ CITY 1 MAURITIUS HOLDINGS and UNITECH LIMITED BURLEY HOLDINGS LIMITED LCIA CASE NO. 111809 ARSANOVIA LIMITED and CRUZ CITY 1 MAURITIUS HOLDINGS Claimant Respondents Claimant Respondents Claimant Respondent - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Jonathan Hirst QC and Craig Morrison (instructed by Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP) for the Claimants Daid Wolfson QC and Nehali Shah (instructed by White & Case LLP) for the Defendants Hearing dates: 21 and 22 Noember 2012 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Mr Justice Andrew Smith: Judgment Introduction 1. On 6 July 2012 three awards were issued by Tribunals appointed by the London Court of International Arbitration comprising the same three members, Mr Salim Moolan, Mr Paul Hannon and Mr J William Rowley: i) An award in an arbitration between 1 Mauritius Holdings ( Cruz City ), a Mauritian company, as claimants and Arsanoia Limited ( Arsanoia ), a Cypriot company, and Burley Holdings Limited ( Burley ), a Mauritian company, as respondents ( Arbitration 1 and Award 1 ). ii) An award in an arbitration between as claimants and Burley and Unitech Limited, (Unitech ), an Indian company, as respondents ( Arbitration 2 and Award 2 ). iii) An award in an arbitration between Arsanoia and Burley as claimants and as respondents, in which made a counterclaim against Arsanoia ( Arbitration 3 and Award 3 ). On these applications under section 67 of the Arbitration Act, 1996 Arsanoia, Burley and Unitech challenge Awards 1 and 2 on the grounds that the Tribunals did not hae substantie jurisdiction. The Tribunals hae determined that they had substantie jurisdiction, but their decisions do not bind me in any way and I must consider the matter de noo: Dallah Real Estate and Tourism Holding Co The Ministry of Religious Affairs, Goernment of Pakistan, [2010] UKSC 46, paras 26 and 96. The claim form also made applications under section 68 but they were not pursued. 2. Unitech is the parent company of Arsanoia and Burley, and the arbitrations arise out of a joint enture into which they entered with for the deelopment of slum areas in Mumbai, India, which inoled finding the residents temporary housing, clearing the slums, redeeloping the areas and re-housing the residents. For this purpose, a company called Kerrush Inestments Limited ( Kerrush ) was formed with Arsanoia and as shareholders. Arsanoia, and Kerrush entered into a Shareholders Agreement ( SHA ) dated 6 June 2008, and other persons and companies, including Burley, subscribed to parts of the SHA. Unitech, Burley and entered into a Keepwell Agreement, also dated 6 June 2008, under which Unitech agreed to put Burley in funds so that it could make payments due under the SHA. The clearance of the slums was delayed, and on 14 July 2010 Arsanoia sered a Management Approal Termination Notice and a Buy-Out Notice on on the grounds that a Bankruptcy/Dissolution Eent (as defined in the SHA) had occurred in respect of the Affiliate which controls (Lehman Brother Holdings Inc, which had filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in the USA). If they were alid, the notices would hae gien Arsanoia management control oer Kerrush and require to sell its interest in Kerrush to Arsanoia under a formula in the SHA. On 13 September 2010 purported to exercise a put

Approed Judgment option under the SHA on the basis that requirements for the start of the construction phase of the project had not been met, and required Arsanoia to buy City Cruz s interest in Kerrush. The terms of the put option were much more faourable to Cruz City than the formula goerning the Buy-Out Notice. The essential question in the arbitrations was whether Arsanoia s notices were alid because, if they were, Cruz City was neer entitled to exercise the put option. 3. This question led to the three arbitrations. In Arbitration 1, sought against Arsanoia and Burley damages and specific performance under the SHA. In Arbitration 2 they sought damages against Unitech and Burley under the Keepwell Agreement. In Arbitration 3 Arsanoia sought a declaration that their notices had been alidly issued and specific performance of s obligations under the SHA or damages for their breach or both, and brought a counterclaim seeking relief against Arsanoia and Burley similar to that sought in Arbitration 1. The SHA and the Keepwell Agreement both contained arbitration agreements in materially the same terms. I need set out only that in the SHA, which proided at clause 21.1 in these terms: LCIA Arbitration. Any dispute arising out of or in connection with the proisions of this Agreement, including any question regarding its alidity, existence or termination, shall be referred to and finally settled by arbitration under the London Court of International Arbitration Rules ( Rules ), which rules are deemed to be incorporated by reference into this Clause. The number of arbitrators shall be three. The seat or legal place of the arbitration shall be London, England. The language to be used in the arbitral proceedings shall be English.... Notwithstanding the aboe, the Parties hereto specifically agree that they will not seek any interim relief in India under the Rules or under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 (the Indian Arbitration Act ), including Section 9 thereof. The proisions of Part 1 of the Indian Arbitration Act are expressly excluded. For the aoidance of doubt, the procedure in this Clause 21 shall be the exclusie procedure for the resolution of all disputes referred to herein. 4. The SHA and the Keepwell Agreement were both goerned by Indian law: clause 24 of the SHA proided that: Goerning Law. This agreement shall be goerned by, and construed in accordance with laws of India, without regard to the conflict of law rules thereof that would require the application of the laws of another jurisdiction. Clause 18 of the Keepwell Agreement proided that:

Approed Judgment Goerning Law. This Keepwell Agreement shall be goerned by, and construed and interpreted in accordance with, the laws of India without regard to conflicts of laws principles thereof. 5. Although the three arbitrations were separate and were neer formally consolidated (hence three separate awards), they were heard together by the same Tribunal. The claimants disputed the jurisdiction of the Tribunals to determine Arbitrations 1 and 2 and the counterclaim in Arbitration 3. In Awards 1 and 2 the Tribunals determined that they had jurisdiction, determined that Arsanoia was not entitled to gie the notices and had alidly exercised the put option, and ordered Burley and Unitech to pay what was due under the put option. In Award 3, the Tribunal, without making findings on jurisdiction, dismissed the claim and the counterclaim. 6. The grounds on which Mr Jonathan Hirst QC, who represented the claimants, argued that Award 1 is inalid because the Tribunal did not hae substantie jurisdiction are these: i) The law applicable to the arbitration agreement in the SHA is Indian law and therefore Indian law determines whether Burley is a party to it. ii) Under Indian law, Burley did not agree to be bound by the arbitration agreement in the SHA; and een if the arbitration agreement is goerned by English law it did not do so. iii) Under Indian law, where an arbitration is brought against two respondents only one of whom is party to the arbitration agreement, the arbitration cannot be maintained against either; and so, because the Tribunal did not hae jurisdiction oer Burley, it did not hae jurisdiction to decide the claims against Arsanoia either. Mr Hirst submitted that Award 2 is also inalid because the Tribunal did not hae substantie jurisdiction on these grounds: i) The law goerning the arbitration agreement in the Keepwell Agreement is Indian law and therefore Indian law determines its scope. ) Under Indian law and on the proper construction of the Keepwell Agreement the claims against Unitech and Burley could be brought only after Burley s liability under the SHA had been adjudicated (if not admitted); and they were therefore premature and beyond the Tribunal s jurisdiction. i) In any case, under Indian law the question whether Burley was liable under the SHA in the arbitration leading to Award 2 was not within the scope of the

Approed Judgment arbitration agreement in the Keepwell Agreement, and, since Award 1 was inalid, therefore Burley had not been alidly found to be liable under the SHA and so the Tribunal in Arbitration 2 had no jurisdiction to make an award against Burley or Unitech under the Keepwell Agreement. All these propositions were disputed by Mr Daid Wolfson QC, who represented Cruz City. 7. The applications made, as I hae said, under section 67 of the Arbitration Act, 1996 and challenge Awards 1 and 2 as to [the Tribunals ] substantie jurisdiction, that is to say (since the term substantie jurisdiction has the same meaning in section 67 as in section 30, where it is defined) as to (a) whether there is a alid arbitration agreement, (b) whether the tribunal is properly constituted, and (c) whether matters hae been submitted to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement. The law applicable to the arbitration agreement in the SHA 8. Questions about the law applicable to arbitration agreements are not coered by the Rome I Regulation (Regulation (EC) 593/2008 on the law applicable to contractual obligations) because by article 1(2)(e) it does not apply to arbitration agreements. They are determined by reference to the English common law conflict of law rules, and so the court first decides whether the parties expressly or impliedly chose a law applicable to the arbitration agreement; if they did, the court gies effect to the parties choice; and if they did not, the court identifies the system of law with which the arbitration agreement has its closest and most real connection. Here it was in dispute whether or not Burley was party to an arbitration agreement with, and so the questions are directed to a putatie arbitration agreement to which Burley, as well as and Arsanoia, was party. 9. The issue concerns the law that goerns the scope of the jurisdiction of the Tribunal appointed under the LCIA rules for Arbitration 1 (which might be called the law of the reference): it is the law applicable to the (putatie) agreement between the parties to the reference and the members of the Tribunal. This is not as a matter of legal analysis identical to the law applicable to the arbitration agreement whereby the parties agreed (or, for the purposes of determining the applicable law, are taken to hae made a putatie agreement) to refer a dispute to arbitration (which might be called the law of the arbitration agreement). Howeer, as obsered in Joseph, Jurisdiction and Arbitration Agreements and their Enforcement (2 nd Ed, 2010), the two laws will be the same in all but an exceptional case, and no difference was suggested here or in any of the authorities to which I was referred. Neither the law of the reference nor the law of the arbitration agreement needs be the same as the law (or any of the laws) applicable to any matrix contract containing the arbitration agreement or to the substantie dispute that is the subject of the reference (sometimes called the lex causae). Equally, they need not be the same as the curial law which goerns the conduct of the reference (sometimes called the lex fori or lex arbitri), which is often determined by the choice of the seat of the arbitration and therefore often inoles

Approed Judgment acceptance that that law goerns the superision of the arbitration by the courts. In the case of international arbitrations with a seat in England and Wales the choice of the seat inoles acceptance of the mandatory proisions of Part 1 of the Arbitration Act, 1996 (listed in Schedule 1 to the Act) and (as proided in section 4(4)), It is immaterial whether or not the law applicable to the parties agreement is the law of England and Wales, the parties agreement being their arbitration agreement, as Cooke J obsered in C D, [2007] EWHC 1541 (Comm) at para 24. 10. Although, as Lord Mustill pointed out in Channel Tunnel Group Ltd Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd, [1993] AC 334, 357F, more than one national system of law can bear upon an international arbitration, the parties would not be expected to hae chosen pointlessly to resort to numerous different systems to goern their affairs, and so an express choice of a law to goern them in one respect is a strong indication that they might hae understood or intended that it should apply to others. The difficulty that arises here and has arisen before is that the parties hae chosen as the lex causae the law of one country, but by agreeing to resole disputes through arbitrations with a seat elsewhere they hae clearly indicated the choice of a different lex fori. In these circumstances, which law is (or, notionally, laws are) applicable to the arbitration agreement and determines the jurisdiction of a tribunal appointed under it? More specifically, here the lex causae of the SHA is (by the parties express choice) the law of India whereas the seat of the arbitration is (by the parties express choice) London and so the curial law of the arbitration is English. Which of these two candidates is applicable to the arbitration agreement? Similar issues hae recently been considered by the Court of Appeal in C D, [2007] EWCA Ci 1282 and Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA and ors Enesa Engenharia SA and ors, [2012] EWCA Ci 638, and these two authorities were closely analysed before me. 11. The dispute in C D concerned the Bermuda form, which proides that This policy shall be goerned by and construed in accordance with the internal laws of New York (with some exceptions) but also proides for arbitration in London of disputes arising from the policy. The insurers threatened to challenge under US federal arbitration law in a federal court an award secured by the insured in a London arbitration, and the insured obtained an anti-suit injunction from the Commercial Court. The insurers appealed, arguing that the choice of English law as the curial law of the arbitration did not exclude a challenge under the law of New York, which had been expressly chosen to goern the parties obligations. The insured argued that, because the parties had chosen London as the seat of the arbitration and therefore English law as the curial law, the law of the arbitration was English and an award could be challenged only in the English courts. The only reasoned judgment in the Court of Appeal was that of Longmore LJ. His ratio for upholding the anti-suit injunction was that by choosing London as the seat of the arbitration, the parties must be taken to hae agreed that proceedings on the award should be only those permitted by English law (para 16), and the choice of a seat for the arbitration must be a choice of forum for the remedies seeking to attack the award (para 17). This reasoning did not depend upon which was the curial law of the arbitration and what Longmore LJ said about that was by way of obiter dicta. But, by expressing their agreement with Longmore LJ s judgment, Sir Anthony Clarke MR and Jacob LJ must, I think, be taken to mean that they agree with them.

Approed Judgment 12. Longmore LJ distinguished the proper law of the underlying insurance contract and the arbitration agreement, obsering that the latter was a separable and separate agreement, and said that the law of the seat of the arbitration will also be releant. He then formulated the question for consideration as being this: if there is no express law of the arbitration agreement, whether the law with which that agreement has its closest and most real connection is that of the seat of the underlying contract or the law of the seat of the arbitration. He considered that the answer is more likely to be the law of the seat of the arbitration than the law of the underlying contract. He cited the obseration of Mustill J in Black Clawson International Ltd Papierworke Waldhof-Aschaffenburg SA, [1981] 2 Lloyd s Rep 446, 453: In the great majority of cases, [the lex causae, the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, and the lex fori] will be the same. But this will not always be so. It is by no means uncommon for the proper law of the substantie contract to be different from the lex fori; and it does happen, although much more rarely, that the law goerning the arbitration agreement is also different from the lex fori. Longmore LJ understood that Mustill J was saying that the law of the arbitration agreement would only rarely be different from the law of the place (or seat) of the arbitration, and therefore his obseration supported the iew that the law of the seat of the arbitration had the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement. 13. The Sulamérica case was also about insurance. A clause in the policy recorded agreement that this Policy is goerned exclusiely by the laws of Brazil. An arbitration agreement proided that, if the parties did not resole what was to be paid under the policy through mediation that the parties agreed first to undertake, the dispute would be referred to arbitration and the seat of the arbitration was to be in London. It is, I think, impossible not to detect in the judgment of Moore-Bick LJ in the Sulamérica case that he was uncomfortable with the reasoning of Longmore LJ, particularly because, haing decided that there was no express choice of a law to goern the arbitration agreement, Longmore LJ went directly to the question which law had the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement, whereas Moore-Bick LJ emphasised (loc cit at para 25) that first the court should consider whether the parties made an implied choice of a law applicable to it and considered that, while the express choice of a law to goern the Policy was not an express choice of the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, it was a strong pointer towards an implied choice of the law of Brazil as the proper law of that agreement (para 27). Howeer, he recognised that, although there were powerful factors in faour of an implied choice of Brazilian law as the goerning law of the arbitration agreement, two other considerations indicated otherwise; the choice of the seat of arbitrations, coupled with the ineitable acceptance of English law to goern the conduct and superision of arbitrations; and the fact that, according to the insured, under Brazilian law the arbitration agreement was enforceable only with their consent and the perceied improbability that the parties intended it to be goerned by a law that made the arbitration agreement so one-sided. Moore-Bick LJ concluded that these two considerations outweighed the indication in the choice of Brazilian law to goern the policy as to an implicit choice by the parties of the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, notwithstanding a starting assumption that they intended the same law to goern the whole of the contract. Therefore, since the goerning law of the arbitration agreement was not determined by either an express or an implied

Approed Judgment choice of the parties, Moore-Bick went on to identify which system of law had the closest and most real connection to it, and he decided that it was the law of England. 14. Hallett LJ simply said that she agreed with the judgment of Moore-Bick LJ, whereby, as I take it, meaning that she agreed with both his conclusion and his reasoning. 15. Lord Neuberger MR said that he agreed with Moore-Bick LJ s conclusion and reasoning but added his own obserations. He said this (at para 51): Gien the desirability of certainty in the field of commercial contracts and the number of authorities on the point, it is, at least at first sight, surprising that it is by no means easy to decide in many such cases whether the proper law of the arbitration agreement is (i) that of the country whose law is to apply to the contract or (ii) that of the country which is specified as the seat of the arbitration. Howeer, once it is accepted that that issue is a matter of contractual interpretation, it may be that it is ineitable that the answer must depend on all the terms of the particular contract, when read in the light of the surrounding circumstances and commercial common sense. Lord Neuberger recognised that C D had taken a rather different approach from earlier cases, and continued as follows (at paras 56 and 57): Accordingly, (i) there are a number of cases which support the contention that it is rare for the law of the arbitration to be that of the seat of the arbitration rather than that of the chosen contractual law, as the arbitration clause is part of the contract, but (ii) the most recent authority is a decision of this court which contains clear dicta (albeit obiter ) to the opposite effect, on the basis that the arbitration clause is seerable from the rest of the contract and plainly has a ery close connection with the law of the seat of the arbitration. Faced with this rather unsatisfactory tension between the approach in the earlier cases and the approach in C D, it seems to me that, at any rate in this court, we could take one of two courses. The first would be to follow the approach in the most recent case, gien that it was a decision of this court, namely C D. The alternatie course would be to accept that there are sound reasons to support either conclusion as a matter of principle. Whicheer course is adopted, it is necessary to consider whether there is anything in the other proisions of the contract or the surrounding circumstances which assist in resoling the conundrum.

Approed Judgment Haing rejected the possibility of treating the obiter dicta in C D as wrong, Lord Neuberger then said that each of the two other possible courses that he had identified led to the conclusion that the arbitration clause was goerned by English law, and therefore it was unnecessary to chose between them and he did not do so. 16. Mr Hirst submitted that the judgment of Moore-Bick LJ in the Sulamérica case supports his contention that the law applicable to the arbitration agreement in the SHA is Indian law, the law chosen as the lex causae in the SHA. Mr Wolfson submitted that the same case, and in particular the judgment of Lord Neuberger MR, supports his contention that the applicable law is the same as the curial law, that is to say English law. 17. All the members of the Court of Appeal in the Sulamérica case certainly subscribed to Moore-Bick LJ s reasoning, but Lord Neuberger gae additional reasons of his own about which the other members of the court said nothing. I am not confident that I understand them: his starting point is that the question of which law goerns an arbitration agreement is a matter of contractual interpretation, notwithstanding the decision in C D and conclusion of Moore-Bick LJ depended not upon any express or implied choice of the parties but upon which system of law had the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement because the parties had made no choice in their contracts properly interpreted. Howeer, this much seems clear: the court should consider whether the parties hae (impliedly, if not expressly) chosen an applicable law before considering which system of law has the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement, and of the judgments in these two cases only that of Moore-Bick LJ discusses the proper approach to that anterior question. 18. Mr Hirst argued that the parties to the SHA agreement impliedly chose Indian law as the law applicable to the arbitration agreement because they chose it to goern the SHA itself. He relied on the judgment of Moore-Bick LJ, and in particular these passages at para 11 and para 26: It has long been recognized that in principle the proper law of an arbitration agreement which itself forms part of a substantie contract may differ from that of the contract as a whole, but it is probably fair to start from the assumption that, in the absence of any indication to the contrary, the parties intended the whole of their relationship to be goerned by the same system of law. It is common for parties to make an express choice of law to goern their contract, but unusual for them to make an express choice of the law to goern any arbitration agreement contained within it; and where they hae not done so, the natural inference is that they intended the proper law chosen to goern the substantie contract also to goern the agreement to arbitrate. In Channel Tunnel Group Ltd Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd [1993] 1 All ER 664 at 682, [1993] AC 334 at 357-358 Lord Mustill said:

Approed Judgment It is by now firmly established that more than one national system of law may bear upon an international arbitration. Thus, there is the proper law which regulates the substantie rights and duties of the parties to the contract from which the dispute has arisen. Exceptionally, this may differ from the national law goerning the interpretation of the agreement to submit the dispute to arbitration. Less exceptionally it may also differ from the national law which the parties hae expressly or by implication selected to goern the relationship between themseles and the arbitrator in the conduct of the arbitration: the curial law of the arbitration, as it is often called. (My emphasis.) And In the absence of any indication to the contrary, an express choice of law goerning the substantie contract is a strong indication of the parties intention in relation to the agreement to arbitrate. A search for an implied choice of proper law to goern the arbitration agreement is therefore likely (as the dicta in the earlier cases indicate) to lead to the conclusion that the parties intended the arbitration agreement to be goerned by the same system of law as the substantie contract, unless there are other factors present which point to a different conclusion. These may include the terms of the arbitration agreement itself or the consequences for its effectieness of choosing the proper law of the substantie contract: 19. Mr Wolfson argued, howeer, that Moore-Bick LJ recognised that the parties choice of London as the seat of the arbitration, importing as it did English law as the lex fori and the law goerning superision of arbitration, shows that the parties did not impliedly choose Indian law as the law applicable to the arbitration agreement. He submitted that the choice of an English seat, absent an effectie contracting out of non-mandatory proisions [of the Arbitration Act, 1996] is tantamount to a choice of English law to regulate all aspect of the arbitration. If he intended to submit that the choice of an English seat means that the parties are to be taken to hae impliedly chosen English as the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, I cannot agree: in the Sulamérica case Moore-Bick LJ did not hold that the parties had impliedly chosen English law to goern the arbitration agreement, but that the parties had made no choice, whether express or implied. Whateer Lord Neuberger meant by his reference to contractual interpretation, I cannot accept that he disagreed with this part of Moore-Bick LJ s reasoning. Howeer, there is another answer to this part of Mr Wolfson s argument: in the Sulamérica case the Court of Appeal concluded that the parties had not made an implied choice because of the combined impact of the choice of a London seat and the perception that the parties could not hae intended the arbitration agreement to operate as it would hae done under Brazilian law. Each of these considerations was described as important, but I do not understand that

Approed Judgment Moore Bick LJ meant that each by itself would displace the indication of choice implicit in the express choice of a law to goern the Policy. 20. There is another consideration that to my mind is releant in this case: that the arbitration agreement included a specific agreement not to seek interim relief under the Indian Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 ( IACA ), including section 9 of that Act, and that the proisions of Part 1 of IACA were expressly excluded. As was explained by Mr Pinaki Misra, a Senior Adocate who gae eidence for the claimants, the background to this proision was that in Bhatia International Bulk Trading SA, (2002) 4 SCC 105, the Supreme Court of India had held that Part I of IACA applied to international arbitrations, although it appeared on its face to apply only to domestic references. (In Bharat Aluminium Co Kaiser Aluminium Technical Serice Inc, a decision of the Supreme Court deliered on 6 September 2012, Bhatia International was oerruled with prospectie effect, but the SHA was concluded in 2008.) Mr Wolfson submitted that it is inconceiable that the parties intended Indian law to goern the arbitration agreement, gien that (i) they contracted for arbitration in London and subject to the English Arbitration Act, 1996 on matters of alidity, the conduct of references and challenges to awards, and (ii) they contracted out of the corresponding proisions of the IACA. I disagree: on the contrary, as I see it and as Mr Hirst submitted, where parties hae expressly excluded specific statutory proisions of a law, the natural inference is that they understood and intended that otherwise that law would apply. Therefore to my mind the reference to IACA in the arbitration agreement supports the claimants contention that the parties einced an intention that the arbitration agreement should be goerned by Indian law (except in so far as they agreed otherwise). 21. I agree with Mr Hirst that the parties to the SHA are to be taken to hae einced an intention that the arbitration agreement in it be goerned by Indian law for the reasons that Moore-Bick LJ explained. The goerning law clause is, at the least, a strong pointer to their intention about the law goerning the arbitration agreement and there is no contrary indication other than choice of a London seat for arbitrations. The wording of the arbitration agreement itself reinforces the conclusion that the parties intended Indian law to goern it. 22. Mr Hirst s submission was that the parties choice of Indian law was implied: he felt unable in light of authority to contend at first instance that the parties made an express choice, but he resered that argument should the case go to superior courts. It seems to me that Mr Hirst might hae been too diffident: that a case for an express choice might hae been aailable een before me. When the parties expressly chose that This Agreement should be goerned by and construed in accordance with the laws of India, they might be thought to hae meant that Indian law should goern and determine the construction of all the clauses in the agreement which they signed including the arbitration agreement. Express terms do not stipulate only what is absolutely and unambiguously explicit, and it seems to me strongly arguable that that is the ordinary and natural meaning of the parties express words (notwithstanding relatiely recent deelopments in the English law about the separability of arbitration agreements from the substantie contract in which it was made and assuming that

Approed Judgment these foreign companies are to be taken to hae known about the deelopments in 2008 when they concluded the SHA). The goerning law proisions in the agreements in the two Court of Appeal authorities referred to the policy and this Policy being goerned by the internal laws of New York and Brazilian law respectiely, and the word policy might naturally be taken to connote to obligations and rights more directly relating to the insurance that the arbitration agreement. Some might consider this a fussy distinction of the kind deprecated in Fiona Trust Prialo, [2007] UKHL 40 para 27, but to my mind it is simply a response to what the parties language naturally connotes or more precisely what I think that in 2008 it would hae connoted to foreign businessmen such as these. 23. Howeer, in iew of the argument before me, that is not for me to decide: Mr Hirst s submissions were (i) that the parties to the arbitration agreement impliedly chose that Indian law should goern it, and (if they did not) (ii) the arbitration agreement had its closest and most real connection with Indian law. There is, as obsered in Chitty of Contracts (31st Ed, 2012) at para 13-002, a close affinity between the implication of terms and the interpretation of express terms, and I need only say that in my judgment the parties einced the intention that the arbitration agreement in the SHA be goerned by the law of India: it is unimportant whether the choice is characterised as express or implied. 24. Had I had to decide which system of law has the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement, I would hae concluded that it is English law for the reasons that Longmore LJ concluded that the English law had the closest and most real connection with the arbitration agreement made between C and D and that Moore-Bick LJ similarly decided in the Sulamérica case. But in iew of my decision about the parties choice of an applicable law, that question does not arise. Did Burley become party to the arbitration agreement in the SHA? 25. The SHA was made between, Arsanoia and Kerrush, and it proided that the expression Parties referred to them. Howeer, by a director Burley signed a signature page to the SHA in these terms (and other persons and entities signed comparable pages referring to other clauses): The undersigned hereby executes this Agreement to be bound by the direct obligations imposed upon them, under Clauses 3.9, 5.5.4, 5.6.2 and 15.3.4. The arbitration agreement was not among the clauses identified. The issue between the parties is whether neertheless Burley and the Parties agreed that Burley should be subject to the arbitration agreement. contend that they did and the claimants dispute that. The question turns upon the proper interpretation of the signature page. I hae concluded that it is goerned by the law of India, but, as I shall explain, I think that it makes no difference whether it is goerned by English or Indian law.

Approed Judgment 26. The clauses which were expressly mentioned on Burley s signature page concerned: i) Construction delay: the SHA proided that might require Burley (as well as Arsanoia) to buy shares under the put option in the eent that the Conditions for Start of Construction of the project were not met on time (clause 3.9); ii) Indemnities and liabilities: the SHA proided that Burley (as well as Arsanoia) should indemnify, defend and hold harmless and others from and against losses arising from specified eents (clause 5.4.4); iii) Representations, warranties and coenants: Burley (as well as Arsanoia) undertook to make payments and contributions under the SHA from contributions or reenues from sources outside India and not from funds receied from India (clause 5.6.2); and i) Indemnity for breach of warranties and coenants: Burley (as well as Arsanoia) agreed to pay their liabilities to within specified time limits (clause 15.3.4). 27. Mr Hirst submitted that the wording signed on their behalf state Burley s agreement to be bound by certain specified clauses of the SHA and the clear implication is that it is not bound by others. I accept that submission: it seems to me that that is the natural meaning of the signature page and that the conclusion is supported by three other considerations: i) In all four clauses identified on the signature page the SHA specifically referred to Burley and stated its obligation in the clause itself. In contrast the Arbitration Agreement did not refer to Burley. ii) On the contrary the Arbitration Agreement referred to the Parties agreeing not to seek interim relief. Had it been intended that Burley was bound by the arbitration agreement, Burley as well as the parties would hae been said to agree to this. (Of course, if Burley were party to the arbitration agreement, there might well be scope for the wording to be manipulated to deal with this, but my point is about what the wording of the clause indicates as to the parties intention.) iii) The signature page referred to Burley being bound by obligations imposed on it. It was not suggested, and I cannot conceie, that the Parties and Burley intended to make a one-sided arbitration agreement: that the Parties should hae a right to bring a reference against Burley, but Burley has no right to bring arbitration proceedings. If Burley were party to the arbitration agreement, they would hae had that right and the Parties (or at least Cruz

Approed Judgment City) would hae undertaken corresponding obligations to Burley, but on its face the signature page does not reflect an agreement of this kind. 28. Mr Hirst had a further argument: did not contend that Burley entered into the arbitration agreement because it was introduced by incorporation from another document, but Mr Hirst suggested that the position here is somewhat analogous. The English courts generally adopt a cautious approach to holding a party bound by arbitration agreements incorporated into their contract. Thus in Aughton Ltd M F Kent Serices Ltd, (1991) 57 BLR 1 Sir John Megaw said (at p.32): This status of self-contained contract exists irrespectie of the type of substantie contract to which it is collateral. In Bremer Vulkan it was a shipbuilding contract. It appears to me that this consideration (which I beliee has not infrequently been oer-looked) is another important reason why arbitration clauses are to be treated as being in a category of their own, as was the arbitration clause in the charterparty, which the House of Lords declined to permit to be incorporated into the bill of lading contract in Thomas Portsea. If this self-contained contract is to be incorporated, it must be expressly referred to in the document which is relied on as the incorporating writing. It is not incorporated by a mere reference to the terms and conditions of the contract to which the arbitration clause constitutes a collateral contract. Russell on Arbitration (23 rd Ed, 2007) obseres: judicial thinking seems to hae faoured the approach of Sir John Megaw in Aughton, namely that general words of incorporation are not sufficient. Rather, particular reference to the arbitration clause needs to be made to comply with s.6 of the Arbitration Act 1996, unless special circumstances exist. I agree that this lends some further support for Mr Hirst s submission that the wording of the signature page is not sufficient to make Burley subject to the arbitration agreement in the SHA. 29. Mr Wolfson pointed out that, as Mr Hirst accepted, Burley s obligations under the SHA were affected by the goerning law clause, which, like the arbitration agreement, is not referred to in the signature page, and he submitted that the same must follow for the arbitration clause. He also submitted that any contrary interpretation would lead to uncommercial results. 30. This reasoning reflects Award 1, in which the Tribunal said this:

Approed Judgment The arbitration clause, and the choice-of-law clauses in (Clause 24), are not primary obligations of the same nature as an obligation to pay. Rather they are accessory obligations which define the conditions in which these primary obligations can be exercised. It is inconceiable, in the Tribunal s iew, that the parties haing taken the care of including compatible and detailed arbitration clauses in both the SHA and the Keepwell Agreement intended that would be free to sue Burley before some (undefined) state court, applying a law other than that expressly chosen in their agreements (Indian law). It is clear, and the Tribunal hereby holds, that the parties intended that the arbitration agreement in the SHA (and, so far as releant, the choice of law clause) would apply to Burley with respect to disputes arising out of or in connection with the limited substantie obligations which it expressly assumed under the SHA, so that both and Burley would be bound to arbitrate and not to litigate any claim relating to those substantie rights. (I cite their reasoning not because the award is binding upon me in any way but simply because it is useful to see how the Tribunal dealt with the question that I am reexamining de noo: see the Dallah Real Estate case at para 160.) 31. I am not persuaded by these considerations: the parties agreement to the goerning law is not analogous to an arbitration agreement. The choice of goerning law bears directly upon the meaning and effect of the obligations to which Burley agreed to bind itself: it is more closely akin to proisions about contractual interpretation or agreed definitions than an arbitration agreement or jurisdiction clause, which are separate agreements about how obligations can be enforced. 32. Mr Wolfson s argument about uncommercial results was in that, if Burley is not party to the arbitration agreement, would not be able to proceed against Arsanoia and Burley in the same forum, and the parties cannot, it is said, hae intended a regime whereby they might hae to sue Arsanoia and Burley on the same (joint and seeral) obligations in different fora. This would be the more surprising gien that (as was not disputed) both were special purpose ehicles incorporated in different jurisdictions. Mr Hirst accepted that it might hae been sensible for the parties to hae entered into tidier arrangements for dispute resolution than they did, but submitted that that is not a justification for manufacturing a bargain that the parties did not make. 33. Mr Wolfson s complaint about uncommercial results is really that the regime for resoling disputes for which the claimants contend would be inconenient from their point of iew. There is nothing uncommercial about the regime whereby Arsanoia or Burley could proceed against. Neertheless, I acknowledge that there would be some force in Mr Wolfson s point about disputes if it were shown that, on the claimants interpretation of the contract, would hae to use different

Approed Judgment fora to sue both Arsanoia and Burley, (with the associated litigation costs and the risk of inconsistent decisions), but this was not established by eidence. For example, Mr Wolfson asserted that if brought proceedings against Burley in Mauritius (where both are incorporated) they could not join Arsanoia in the proceedings, but there was no eidence about whether Mauritian law would preent this. It was for to proe the factual basis for this argument and they hae not done so. But in any eent, if hae made an agreement that has this consequence, that is still the bargain that they made. 34. I hae thus far considered the question whether Burley is party to the arbitration agreement on the basis of English law, and I conclude that on this basis it would not be. Howeer, if I am right that the arbitration agreement is goerned by Indian law, it determines whether Burley is party to it, and I must therefore examine the eidence of Indian law: the claimants relied upon eidence of Mr Misra, and relied upon eidence of Mr Arind Datar, who is also an Indian Senior Adocate. Both were well qualified to gie eidence of Indian law, and they gae clear and careful witness statements to which I pay tribute. They identify two separate questions, which Mr Datar expressed as follows: Is there an agreement in writing for the purposes of S.7 of IACA? If so, what is the scope of the agreement, and can Burley be said to be a party to the same (in the sense of being bound by the same)? The first is a matter of form, the second is a matter of interpretation.. 35. The difference between the parties turns on the second: the SHA agreement, including the arbitration agreement, was wholly in writing, and if Burley assented to it, it was in writing. The question therefore is one of contractual interpretation, and the only admissible eidence of the Indian law experts about it is as to any releant rules of Indian law about contractual construction: Dicey, Morris & Collins, The Conflict of Laws (15 th, 2012) para 9-019. Mr Datar explained that Indian law would approach the question on the basis that a contract proiding for arbitration is a commercial document and to be interpreted as such; that the Indian courts would take into account the improbability that the commercial intention of the parties was that Burley could be sued before an undefined court applying its own choice of law rules (echoing Award 1), or that the intention was that Burley would be bound by the express choice of law in the SHA but not the arbitration agreement; and the impact of the wording of the arbitration clause. But Mr Wolfson did not submit that here or in any other respect the rules or principles of contractual interpretation of Indian law are different from those of English law. I agree with him. Mr Hirst submitted only that Indian law requires that a party s agreement to arbitration must be strictly or specifically shown, and he frankly recognised that the highest that he could put his case is that Indian law takes a marginally tougher iew than English law as to when a party has einced his agreement to arbitrate. I do not consider that established on the eidence: English law requires that an intention to enter into an arbitration clause must be clearly shown and is not readily inferred, and I hae seen nothing in the eidence that shows any different rule of construction under Indian law. Indeed, Mr Hirst accepted that something of a softening of approach of the Indian courts, at least in relation to international arbitrations, may be detected in the Seern Trent Water case, to which I refer below.

Approed Judgment 36. I therefore uphold the challenge to Award 1 as against Burley because (in the words of section 30 of the Arbitration Act, 1996) there is not a alid arbitration agreement between and Burley. Did the Tribunal hae jurisdiction to make Award I against Arsanoia? 37. The claimants contend that, if Burley was not party to the arbitration agreement in the SHA, the Tribunal did not hae jurisdiction as a matter of Indian law to hear the claims against Arsanoia either. This argument is based upon Mr Misra s eidence that under Indian law a dispute cannot be adjudicated in arbitration if the entire subject matter of the suit is not coered by the arbitration agreement between the parties or if the dispute concerns a person or persons who are not party to the arbitration agreement. According to Mr Misra, this principle is demonstrated by the decision of the Supreme Court of India in Sukanya Holdings (P) Ltd Jayesh Pandya and anor, (2003) 5 SCC 531, a case that was itself concerned with the dissolution of a partnership and a petition by one of the partners that the court should refer the parties to arbitration under section 8 of the IACA, which proides that A judicial authority before which an action is brought in a matter which is the subject of an arbitration agreement shall, if a party so applies [in time], refer the parties to arbitration. The petition was opposed inter alia on the grounds that relief was claimed not only against parties to the arbitration agreement but other partners who were not. The High Court refused the petition and the Supreme Court upheld the decision. The Supreme Court said: The next question which requires consideration is een if there is no proision for partly referring the dispute to arbitration, whether such a course is possible under Section 8 of the Act? In our iew, it would be difficult to gie an interpretation to Section 8 under which bifurcation of the cause of action that is to say the subject matter of the suit or in some cases bifurcation of the suit between parties who are parties to the arbitration agreement and others is possible. This would be laying down a totally new procedure not contemplated under the Act. If bifurcation of the subject matter of a suit was contemplated, the legislature would hae used appropriate language to permit such a course. Since there is no such indication in the language, if follows that bifurcation of the subject matter of an action brought before a judicial authority is not allowed. Such bifurcation would also cause delay and the risk of conflicting decisions. 38. Mr Misra recognised that section 8 of the IACA is directly concerned with domestic arbitrations, but he considered that it applies equally to foreign arbitrations, citing in support of this the decision of the Bombay High Court in Seern Trent Water Purification, Inc Chloro Controls India Pt Ltd and ors, (2010) (2) Bom CR 712, a case concerning an international arbitration. In that case, a notice of motion had been brought under section 8 of IACA (in part I of the Act, which applies where the place

Approed Judgment of the arbitration is in India), but it was conceded that it should hae been brought under section 45 (in Part II, which concerns foreign awards ). Under section 45 a judicial authority, when seized of an action in a matter in respect of which the parties hae made an agreement [in writing for arbitration to which the New York Conention (the Conention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards) applies] shall, at the request of one of the parties or any persons claiming through or under him, refer the parties to arbitration, unless it finds that the said agreement is null and oid, inoperatie, or incapable of being performed. It was said by the Supreme Court (at para 16) that, both sections are, in the most part, para materia [sic], as to the circumstances in which a reference can be made of disputes to arbitration. The application for a reference succeeded on the basis that (at para 20), the law laid down by the Apex court [sc., as I understand the terminology, the Supreme Court] in the case of Sukanya Holdings is not applicable to the facts of the case in hand. The concept of separation of parties, separation of reliefs or separation of cause in the suit on making a reference to arbitration would not arise in the instant case. 39. Mr Datar did not consider that the decision in the Sukanya case supports the principle that Mr Misra extracted from it. He said that it is directed to the powers of the court under section 8 of the IACA to refer matters to arbitration where this would lead to the bifurcation of a cause of action, and not with whether a tribunal is competent to adjudicate under an arbitration agreement; and further the underlying rationale is to aoid delay in resoling disputes and the risk of irreconcilable judgments, reasons that Mr Datar considered weigh in faour of both Burley and Arsanoia being bound by the arbitration agreement and Award 1, not against either of them being so bound. 40. Both these points are true as far as they go: howeer, although the decision in the Sukanya case was made in the context of an application under section 8 of the IACA, this does not engage with Mr Misra s point that it reflects what, he says, is an underlying principle of Indian law that arbitration clauses are construed strictly and are effectie only to make arbitrable matters in dispute that are wholly coered by it. Mr Misra cited three other cases that he said explain or apply this principle: i) The decision of the High Court of Madras in Kensoft Infotech Limited Sundaram BNP Paribas Home Finance Ltd and anor, MIPR 2010 (1) 301, in which the claimants brought proceedings against two defendants, with the first of whom they had entered into an arbitration agreement. The allegation was that the defendants had colluded to infringe the claimant s copyright. An application to refer the claimants and first defendants to arbitration was refused (at para 17): This Court has to necessarily indicate that there is no proision in the Act which enables the Court to refer a matter to arbitration, if the subject matter of the suit includes the subject matter of arbitration agreement as well as other disputes also. Equally, there is no proision for splitting up the cause of action or the parties and referring the matter to arbitration. Apart from that, Section 8 does not enisage or answer a